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Lang at 40: The Politics of Contemporary Theater October 14

Lang at 40: The Politics of Contemporary Theater

Lang at 40: The Politics of Contemporary Theater © The New School

18.09.2025 - Article

Panel on the legacy of Erwin Piscator at the New School and on Political Theater

In 1939, Alvin Johnson, the first president of The New School, invited the prominent political theater maker and theorist Erwin Piscator to start the Dramatic Workshop in the building that now houses the Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts. In 1933, Johnson had founded The University in Exile as an intellectual home for scholars fleeing Nazism in Europe. The history of classes setting theater in conversation with contemporary society goes even further back, to the first decade after its founding in 1919. This panel explores how the radical ethos that marked the early years of The New School has shaped the role of theater and performance at Lang throughout the past century to the present.

Established in the historical window between the rise of Fascism in Europe and the Second Red Scare in the United States, the Dramatic Workshop brought together Piscator’s foundational experience in epic theater with the political effervescence of the post-Depression New York theater scene. As such, the Workshop can be thought of as a theatrical strand within a larger trend that effectively moved the center of the intellectual, artistic, and political discussions of the time from the European capitals to New York City. The Second Red Scare gradually strangled the political effervescence of US education and cultural production, yet the legacy of this original gesture can be traced in many strands throughout the past century, such as in alum Judith Malina’s subversive work with the Living Theater, in the radical Black performance of Sekou Sundiata, in the political plays produced by Lang Theater faculty and students in the 21st Century, among so many other places.

Carried out in the same theater that showcased the productions of the Dramatic Workshop in the 1940s, the talks in this panel explore the many ways in which the legacy of contemporary political theater has been carried out, expanded, and challenged over the decades. Most importantly, we ask how this legacy shapes the teaching and research we carry out in this same building—under a distinct yet eerily similar set of challenges—today.

Date and Time: Tuesday, October 14; 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM

Location: JOHNSON/KAPLAN AUDITORIUM, 66 WEST 12TH STREET, ROOM A106, FIRST FLOOR

More Information: https://www.event.newschool.edu/politicsoftheater

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